no because it eats fish which are primary consumers
Jake wrote this. If your looking at this you're totally awesome
No, seahorses are all predatory, and feed on small shrimps and other invertibrates, making them secondary consumers.
Yes, because you can not see phytoplankton with the naked eye.
Though the next biggest thing are bugs like macoinvertabryes.
zooplankton is a primary consumer, because the chain continues as follows
phytoplankton>>zooplankton>>fish>>large fish
is a anemone a secondary or primary counsumer
a cope pod is a primary consumer
Primary consumer
Microscopic algae are primary producers
Sea anemone do not have cell walls.
One example: A sea anemone and hermit crab have a mutual relationship. The sea anemone protects the crab and the crab provides food.
parasitic relationship. the parasite benefits and the host suffers
While Sea Anemone's appear slow, they are actually moving at a rate so fast it is not perceivable to the human eye.
Insects get food from flowers and help the flowers reproduce.
It depends on what species of sea turtle your talking about, there are sea turtles that are primary consumers and there are sea turtles that are secondary consumers.
It depends on what species of sea turtle your talking about, there are sea turtles that are primary consumers and there are sea turtles that are secondary consumers.
It depends on what species of sea turtle your talking about, there are sea turtles that are primary consumers and there are sea turtles that are secondary consumers.
A sea gull is a secondary consumer. It eats fish which are the primary consumers.
The sea otter is consumed by other mammals, so, no... it is not a tertiary consumer, but a primary or secondary consumer would be more accurate. Daally
in the food chain a sea anemone is a consumer because it eats alive organisms. An anemone is also a carnivore
a sea lion is a secondary consumer
The penguin is a secondary consumer because it consumes first order consumers. Its most common prey is fish which are primary consumers.
The sea otter is consumed by other mammals, so, no... it is not a tertiary consumer, but a primary or secondary consumer would be more accurate. Daally
yes it is a secondary consumer
like bruh.. ITS A SPOOKY MPNNN
consumer